Articles

Ideas

The real reason people can’t stand free markets

If you have argued in favour of market-based solutions in some area of society which is under government control, you may have received objections along the lines of ‘I don’t believe the market can handle X’, ‘companies only look at the short term’ or ‘companies are motivated by greed and cannot be trusted to handle […]

Free Speech

Should we have banned Cenk Uygur from the UK?

Should universities have a say before speakers are excluded from the UK? The Government has cancelled the Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) of a controversial left-wing US political commentator, in a move that prevents him from appearing at one of the UK’s oldest debating societies and raises renewed questions about broad and discretionary powers used to […]

Why elites fear common sense
Culture

Why elites fear common sense

This is an edited extract from ‘In Defence of Populism’ by Frank Furedi, published with permission. In recent times I have been struck by the frequency with which common sense serves as a target of scorn by educators, especially in universities. It is also treated with contempt by the cultural elites in the media. Common […]

Ideas

The war on beauty is a war on freedom

To egalitarians, anything that rises above the average, be it wealth or exceptional beauty, is questionable. And, as in the economic and social spheres, this is another area in which they expect the state to intervene with regulations and bans. Heather Widdows, whose book ‘Perfect Me: Beauty as an Ethical Ideal’ was published in 2018, […]

Ideas

Labour’s war on pubs is killing community

On Wednesday mornings in my little rural village in Hampshire, I have two options for a morning coffee. The first is the charming community café, freshly ensconced in the village hall, which is a cross-generational space where my teenage daughter serves coffee to our octogenarian neighbours, and which I happen to love. The second is […]

Ideas

Does Britain really need another Winston Churchill?

Last Friday morning, there was a palpable sense that Britain was having a nervous breakdown. The abominable Greens had stormed to victory in the Gorton and Denton by-election; in Parliament Square, the statue of Winston Churchill had been defaced with graffiti branding the Greatest Briton a ‘Zionist war criminal’ and calling for the globalisation of […]

Ideas

Britain is unthinkable without its Monarchy

Three and a half years ago, the British Monarchy appeared serene in its stability. After a lifetime of grandeur and service, a great reign had ended. In response, the national mood appeared to be one of solemnity and gratitude. Although there were complaints from fringe groups, they appeared to be speaking for no one except […]

Culture

No, England’s countryside is not too white

Our countryside, we have just been solemnly told by administrators, is too white. It is ‘seen by both black, Asian and minority ethnic groups and white people as very much a ‘white’ environment’. National Park and National Landscapes administrators (as Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty planners have now become) have jumped enthusiastically on board, announcing […]

Reviews

CapX’s books of 2025

Our staff and contributors have rounded up some of their favourite works of the year, and whether you’re after a history of English poetry or a sleazy Frenchman’s account of a trip to Lanzarote, there’s something for everyone in CapX’s Books of 2025. Robert Colvile, CapX Editor-in-Chief Since we’ve all had enough of politics at […]

Ideas

The world’s oldest Christian country is under threat

The decline of Christianity is nothing new. Some 150 years ago, Matthew Arnold, in his poem ‘Dover Beach’, mourned the ‘melancholy, long, withdrawing roar’ of the ‘Sea of Faith’. And that was in the high noon of Victorian England. Today, he would have far more to be concerned about. The last 20 years have witnessed […]

Culture

Young people need culture, not condescension

It is easy to scoff at the middle-class pretensions of Canterbury Cathedral’s current graffiti display. As Joseph Dinnage, the deputy editor of this publication, notes on X, it looks as though the cathedral has been turned ‘into a South London youth club c.2005’. The style of the temporary graffiti they have plastered on the ancient […]

Culture

Ethnonationalism is rearing its head on Britain’s Right

Last week, Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner warned that the effects of immigration and social cohesion, among other factors such as rapid de-industrialisation, was having a profound impact on society and trust in public institutions. However, she expressed the belief that Britain was a successful multi-ethnic, multi-faith democracy – but how right is she?  Rayner’s […]

Ideas

How television ate politics

There is much discussion right now about the dysfunctionality of UK politics. This goes beyond complaints about the policy incoherence or ineffectuality of any particular government, whether that be the current one or its Tory and Coalition predecessors. Rather, there is a growing feeling that the political system itself, the whole process of politics, no […]

Culture

Nimby Watch: The society holding Soho back

In this edition of Nimby Watch, James Ball journeys to… actually, this week let’s just jump right in. Okay, where are we this week? We’re visiting an idyllic village, somewhere people apparently move for a slower pace of life, to enjoy the peace and quiet and to have uninterrupted access by road to anywhere they’d […]

Policy

Joyless Nimbys are killing our music industry

It’s a crescendo as predictable as a chorus from the latest chart-topper – and unfortunately in a minor key. Late last week, a High Court judge ruled that Lambeth Council had bodged the planning process for the Brockwell Live festival series, throwing into doubt whether the events can go ahead at all. Brockwell Live had been […]

Policy

The ‘Kneecap formula’ for arts funding

‘Up Hamas, up Hezbollah!’ I don’t know about you, but if I was at a gig and heard a band yelling that to the crowd of adoring fans, I’d assume that they quite liked Hamas and Hezbollah. Just like if I walked the streets screaming ‘Millwall!’ at people, you could reasonably infer that I was […]